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Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The sin of grumbling

Complaining is a sin. Perhaps not a major one like pride or greed but it is probably worse than lust which is what much of our Anglican Communion kerfuffles revolve around. It's born ultimately from two things: a frustrated sense of entitlement, and a lack of faith.

The frustrated sense of entitlement is triggered when reality and expectation start to diverge in a significant manner. It is 'My God My God why have you forsaken me?' Yet we are not promised an easy life, we are in fact promised the opposite: "God blesses you when people mock you and persecute you and lie about you and say all sorts of evil things against you because you are my followers." Christians have no grounds for a sense of entitlement. It's all grace, it's all gift, and the appropriate response is thanksgiving and the counting of blessings. I resolve to improve, and my penance is to say the General Thanksgiving every morning until my heart is turned.

The lack of faith is even deeper. Faith and doubt are not opposites, faith and fear are opposites, and grumbling and complaining are centred in a fear of not achieving our heart's desires, a lack of trust in God's goodness and provision for us. It is the desire to achieve our own ends, and not surrender to God's intentions for us. It is the Israelites running from the Egyptians and not listening to Moses saying 'The Lord shall fight for you and ye shall hold your peace'. I resolve to improve, and my penance is to sing this hymn each morning until my heart is turned:

Forth in thy Name, O Lord, I go,my daily labor to pursue; thee, only thee, resolved to know in all I think or speak or do.

Great post, Sam. I couldn't agree more - there is something very non-God-affirming about Christians displaying a sense of entitlement. And much wisdom in immersing yourself in the really rather beautiful General Thanksgiving. Most mornings I also say the Morning Prayer of the Optina Elders, for the same kind of reasons.